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We know that no API can write your code for you, but ours comes close. We’ve placed great importance on making sure our API is the most developer-friendly API available — prioritizing clean documentation, an industry-first API dashboard for easy tracking and debugging, and trained API support engineers to personally assist with your integration. Meaning, you won’t find an eSignature product with an easier or faster path to implementation. It’s 2x faster than other …

Rune Madsen jotted down his notes from a talk he gave at UX Camp Copenhagen back in May all about design systems and also, well, the potential problems that can arise when building a single unifying system:

When you start a redesign process for a company, it’s very easy to briefly look at all their products (apps, websites, newsletters, etc) and first of all make fun of how bad it all looks, and then design this one single design system …

Here’s a nifty post by Jonathan Snook where he walks us through how to make a calendar interface with CSS Grid and there’s a lot of tricks in here that are worth digging into a little bit more, particularly where Jonathan uses grid-auto-flow: dense which will let Grid take the wheels of a design and try to fill up as much of the allotted space as possible.

Colin Bendell writes about a new and particularly weird addition to Safari Technology Preview in this excellent post about the evolution of animated images on the web. He explains how we can now add an MP4 file directly to the source of an img tag. That would look something like this:

<img src="video.mp4"/>

The idea is that that code would render an image with a looping video inside. As Colin describes, this provides a host of performance benefits:

24 Ways, the advent calendar for web geeks, started up again this week. Throughout December they’ll be publishing a wide range of posts all about web design, CSS, and front-end development.

Chen Hui Jing has already written a great post about feature queries and Stephanie Drescher published a post today about a tool called sonarwhal which identifies accessibility, performance and security issues, just to name a few.

For your holiday gift shopping needs! These my picks for some of the most popular books out there on typography, with a tilt toward web typography. Plus a couple of bonus picks by our own Robin Rendle.

It’s relatively easy to get lost in all the new features of CSS Grid because there’s just so much to learn and familiarize ourselves with; it’s much easier to learn it chunk by chunk in my opinion.

And so you might already be familiar with Rachel Andrew’s Grid By Example which contains a whole bunch of tutorials with new layout tips and tricks about CSS Grid. But the minmax() tutorial is one small chunk of Grid that you can learn …

Here’s a good ol’ fashion blog post by Rob Weychert where he looks into the new design system that he implemented on his personal website and specifically the typographic system that ties everything together:

According to the OED, a scale is “a graduated range of values forming a standard system for measuring or grading something.” A piece of music using a particular scale—a limited selection of notes with a shared mathematic relationship—can effect a certain emotional tenor. Want to write …